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Capl. Eddie Rickenbacker
Will Speak Here April 24
—See Paire Thro*' 77ie QAO€UUCUI
Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy"
Greensboro Symphony
6ives Concert Sunday
S<-«' l'np' Four
VOLUME XXV 7. .VII WOMAN'S ( III I.KC.I OK TIIK I'MVKKSITV OK NOKTII VAKOI.IVV (.ICI I NsiioKK. N. G, AKKH. U, 1W4 Nl MIIKK II
Editor of Asheville 'Citizen'
Lectures To Phi Beta Kappa
Hiden RamseyTalks on Topic
'One Day in History' to Girls
Initiated Into Fraternity
speak Inc on '"One I»ny tn History,"
Mr. Hiden Kamsey, •-«tif< r of the Ashe-vllle
Citizcn-Timr*. told the newly-
Initiated members of the Woman's Col-lege
section of Alpha chapter of I'hi
Iteta Knppn, their friends, nnil the
old iiiemlNTK, that thl* eoimtry IN hark
where It wan In the Hummer of 1017.
"W't- have frittered away in senseless
isolation." Mr. Ramsey wild, "the
power of leadership whieh we won
with our sacriflci-s of men and treasure
in that oilier striittflc"
"Ail* If Hitler rune to iH.wer." he
'-oiitiniied. "upon tin' fume of W«M»drow
Wllma which Iml IM'I'II trampled lido
the du-l." Mr. Itlltlixey e*prc--od (lie
belief that Hitler will lie defeated.
"Hut the defeat of Hitler will not be
enoiieh ... It must he followed by
a Jn-t mid durable peace that will
l«e vigilantly ami constantly enforced
by an international organization . . .
AIM \e HII the 1'nltcil Btatea must be
■ iwpoMMe lmrt of that organiza-tlon."
One Junior and 1-" seniors were in
itiated into the Woman** College sec-tion
of Alpha elm pier of I'hi Beta
Kappa in the Alumnae House Friday,
April 21. at 7:30 p.m. After Mr. Ram-sey's
address, a reception was held at
*::«>. About ■"-> guests, ID the main
friends of the newly-elected members,
were Invited to hear the address and
to attend the reception.
MCIIIIMTS who were Initiated are
Ann Itainey, Rillie I'pcburcb. Alison
Hire. Jean Mooninu. Rarbara Roy,
Retty Nlckersron. Helen Sullivan,
Ixnilse f--i7-!i rn-. Anabel Kmbry. Mar-garet
Woosley, Mary Allee Vann, Chase
Johnson, llnrriet Sink, ('aniline «'abell,
and Hal Mareh. seniors, and Rachel
Ni-wliern, the Junior.
Suzanne Walker. Dorothy Levis.
Katheryne I-evls. and Janice Hooke
Moore, seniors, were selected for mem
Iiersbip In therr Junior year.
Miss Jane Snmuierell, of the de-part
incut of KiiKllsh, Is president of
this —ill— of Alphn t'hapter of Phi
Itelu Kiip|ia of the Slate of North
Carolina.
Harris Wofford Talks
To College Students
Wednesday Evening
Founder, First President
Of Student Federalist Union
Advocates Internationalism
Harris Wofford. dynamic lH-year-old
founder and first president of the
Student Federalist I'nloii. sjwike on
the ha-is and ideas of this onranir.a-ii<
n Wednesday night in the Alumnae
BOUUr.
Wofford said In Is'cinnini: bis talk
that the Federalist movement offers n
challenge to the elder statesmen of
Amerlea but mainly in ihe young
people. The idea of the World Fed-eral
1'nlon should, states Wofford, be
:i key issue in the presidential enm-f
«iijni. They mu.-t tackle the tremen-dous
problem of establishing a lasting
peBC¥ after the present world conflict.
This pOOCO will eome." he staled,
"only by the establishment of a deino
rratlc njateai of governini'iit that will
settle international dl-pules." The plan,
according to the Federalist I'niou
Ideals, h.s u II- main program the
formation of an Internal html federal
government organization which in
elmb-s a representative federal union
of democracies. These unions would
represent the poeptoa of nations, not
their governments. The fulfilment of
this plan Is proposed to lie brought
IIIMMII through education llrst and then
through organization.
In Introducing the s|»e:ikcr, Mary
Klleii l*nrd>\ representative of the Stu-dent
Federalists at Woman's College,
stated lhal Wofford bad Just returned
from a- two months' tour of the mid-west
where he had Itcen speaking—
altogether to about -Tp.Otio students—
in the Interest of this- idea ami organ
izlug new chapters. He has also ear-rfed
tin a tour through New Kngland.
Si nee he arrived in this area he baa
sjsiken at Cull ford < '.'liege, Senior
High school, and In talking Wednes-day
night here very probably made
bis last speech before being Inducted
into the Army Air Corps.
Speaker
. . . Hiden Ramsey, editor of the Ashe-ville
PiNcea>Tfntea, will address the
Woman's College ehfipier of I'hi Beta
Kappa at the initiation <>f new ajettV
Is-rs tonight, April 21, at 7 :30 pin
Sale of Stamps Sinks
Too Low to Mention
Amount of war stamps sold this
week was too low to merit print-ing
a list of totals, Dorothy and
Katheryne Lev Is, co-chairmen, have
announced.
Student Legislature
Meets Wednesday
To Discuss Amendment
Two Members Present Idea
For Chang* in Constitution
Concerning Referendum
I»oris Smith and Barbara Bramble
I resented for the consideration of leg
Islature, Wednesday, April W, an
amendment to the SCA constitution
which corn-ems initiative and refer
endliui. If |Nlsscd. Ihls amendment will
!«■ the ninth since the ratllleatlou of
the constitution.
The amendment has beau through
the legal pns-edures for an amendment
to the coiistlliitl said Jean IMefcey,
ehaianan of legislature. It must In
dlspla\.-d on all ball hulletln »-•■ r-l-f
»r the following Iwn weeks, whieh
are Immediately previous fo (In- RMSS
Ilieetiug when the student DOdj will
vote on the qneoUoat,
"We want the lultialive nid refer
eiidum issue considered from all It-sides,
and diseiissed thoroughly in the
dormitory. It has its disadvantage'*
as well as its advantages." said Doris
Smith Among the points for Initia
live and referendum. Dorhl explained
lhal the amendment would "serve as
an Insurance policy for the students.'
In ea^s where laws are passed which
face streng opposition.
Moreover, she stated, legislature win
Is- "freer" In the laws It paaaM and
Its motn tiers can urge on those who
disapprove of legislature's action that
they "do something aliout it them
selves." Ihiris emphasised that the
group who originated the amendment
have done so without any sjtecilic re
forms In mind, but in the light of a
more democratic government.
■"There Is a poaelhflllty that ■ radical
minority may take advantage of this
new procedure. However. I have
ci KB faith in the Judgments ,.f i j..
-indents of (his college in general lo
IH-Iiove that they will consider such
pro|s>sals carefully." said Doras, out-lining
further the arguments cuaeem-lug
initiative and referendum
Twenty par cent was suggested by
Marie Itelk as a more suitable proper.
tion than ten |s-r cent of Ihe student
IMMIV necessary for signing the |S'tl-lion
tu Kct the Initiative and refer-endum
machinery in motion. Doris
noted that eight to ten per cent is
the customary figure In stale consti-tutions
which provide for Intuitive and
referendum, but was answered by the
fact that the students of the college
are In an areu more concentrated than
the population of a state. Hal March
stated that "anything hacked by ten
per cent of the students Is worthy of
consideration.**
IMckey introduced several sugges-tions
which had l"'ii made to ber
which could be lined up under the
(Continued on Page Two)
Dr. Winfield Rogers
Gives English Lecture
On Matthew Arnold
Department Head Explains
Poet As 'Humanist Acting
As Critic of Life'
Shaking Thursday noon. April 13*.
in Ayenefc Auditorium. Dr. Winlield
Hanaro, the third lecturer in the de
part nasal of Kugiish scries, stated that
Matthew Arnold was "the humanist
acting as a critic of life."
Hi- address. entitled "Matthew \r
uoid After Rereading 'Dover Reach*."
atreaued Ihe analysts of lhal aoera. "It
express** much of Arnold's basic, orig
inn) opinion or altitude." Dr. Kogers
said. "The lines .implv that at mo
■Bents in the hi-tory of man. all has
been serene; man at such Momcnls
has been earelopeil b> coniforllna
faith, at such moments man has fell
i irluin . . . The emphasis of the poeJU
is that, taken by and large, there is
an eternal note of sadness, heard now
hy Arnold and his contemporaries;
heard long ago by Sophocles."
In the line. "Ah. love, let ns Is-true
to one another!" I >r. Kogers staled
that "we may find the original of his
credo . . . Starting with this poem, I
wish io bring you etoaer to a great
man's sense ot the three great ■.►attorns
of relationships thai concern the mas-ter
spirits. These relationships, us
ItolMTt Halrhino phrases them, are;
llrsi. man's relation to mini, -<■ "ml.
man's relation lo nature, third, mini's
relation to <!od."
I>r. Rogers said that Arnold's belief
was thai "(MS'try is u criticism of life
|M>werfully rendered by the largely
e«piip|M-d man." and returned to the
original credo to state that the cry
"Is ill oner a cry of dcs|Hiir and a
cry of faith, tin- powerful criticism,
a poetic criticism, even If Incomplete,
an adequate poetic criticism In-cause It
hiis the appropriate, inseparable man
ner."
I li-cussing Arnold and humanism.
Dr. Roger* ■ i.-iim • I hnaaanlsau ns "the
doctrine of human effort, of human
planning, of human iiiau.x shlrdnesH,
of human culture, as nfipuned to sue
ciaUy.aiion. rocaUouallsan, sectarian-ism.
narrownes-. prejudice.** lie said
Louis Fischer Will Give Lecture
Tuesday in Aycock Auditorium
Well Known Author, Foreign Correspondent
Speaks on 'India-Key to Victory Over Japan'
Dr. Dwight Chalmers
Will Deliver Sermon
Minister Plans to Conduct
Various Discussion Groups;
Freshmen Will He Sponsors
"The Knarnee of Itcllcloti" Is the
tentative subject of the last ('Diversity
Sermon of the year to IN- delivered by
l>r. Dwight If. Chalmers, pastor of the
Trinity Avenue Presbyterian * "hurch
in inirliam, Sunday Morning, April
"i>. II a in. In Arrack Auditorium. The
sermon will IK- K|NHUMired by Ihe fresh-man
rlasH.
Sin.-,. |»r K Sianl.v .1 v world
fa - Christian leader and author,
will -jN-ak lIUrlUR the cha|.e| program
the rmllouing Tuesday, there will U
no further opportunity tor the fen-eral
public to hear I *r. Chalmers.
lie win speak in junior primary edu-cation
majors Monday, May I. at HI
a.m. and to senior majors In the
same department at - pin Following
this. Dr. Chal ra will apeak to the
one year commercial class In lllnshaw
hall from 4-."» p.m. on "The Practical
Vain*' of Religion,** and will lead an
Informal dlneusalOB In Hailey hall
Momlay night.
Foreign Correspondent . ..
Modern Dancers To Give
Annual Recital Friday Night
thai "Arnold was
>ei he believed it
man. He VMS a de
in <dne;itioii. II. i
not an arisi* cral :
ihe nrlstwmcj of
uerai who hellered
i- a hiinuin|s| w ho
liHk-Ved In clxlll/.alloi. ||.- MUS a
dear eyed, reullslk' Men11st
"Now. Arnold says, in ellect, we are
arorklng fr limited deamcracjr to
ward e>|iiali)y ; in w, he says. In etTect,
we an- woikiiig from limited deHMM'
racy towards universal democracy :
now. be aayn, in effect, we are work-ing
from limited civHlaathM to mil
versiil ei\ll|y.alloii." sm| In Kogers.
"ArnohTs is-iief in the Inatlnctlre n|.
ward thrust of man is fundamental"
Dr. lingers concluded. "I- it more
or less than ll ry. "Ah, leie. lei US
IN- inn* to one another.' |esl the world
continue io have neither J«y. wor love,
imr light, nor eertltude, nor peace, anf
help tot- pain'.' Man line |« man. man
true to man's self, true to thai noblest
Instinct, the Instinct for expansion. We
inu-1 wilh Arnold nurse 'the uncoil-
•pierahle hope*."
Seniors Will Be Issued
Caps, GownsA pril 26-27
Seniors may %H thrlr raps and
Kowns on April 26 and 'XI from
9 a.m. lo VI noon and from 2 p.m.
to \ pjn. in the Dlkrnn Hall. A
fee of ten rents will be charged.
Tin- seniors, attired In raps and
Eowns. will inert In front of Ihr
uiidltoriiun at StSi May I lo murrb
In for the last mass meetinr,.
W. C. Jackson lo Talk
At Senior Class Meeting
Dean to Speak to Students
On Woman's College Policies
At (.;i( hcriiu; Thursday Night
I»r. w t*. Jackson will !*• Kueat
speaker nl Ihe senior clans meet lug at
7 p.m.. Thursday, April 27. in Htudeaaa'
RulldlUfl He will talk to ihe seniors
ahoiil pnlleles of Woman's Cotleffe.
Itlllie rpcfaurcfa, class presidelll.
pdressen the lutpurtaweof this meeting
and ureea all senhirn lo attend. The
rlnss sift wil Is- roted on at that time,
and several aniioiiiici'inents couceriiliiu
commeiiceineul will he made.
Jean Stepheiioon and I telly Nicker
son were elected dance chairman for
(lie commencement hall and commence
men) s|M-aker. respectively, in Ihe liual
eleitions April 17.
The Sisters Mclntosh . .
. . . Flora liclle Ihi/clniaii. EJQIM, ami Phyllis Sullivan, Tizzie. were
the comedy elinrarters in one of the three one-act plays presented
Saturday. April 1"). in Ayeoek Auditorium. "Twelve I'ouud l^Mik"
and *'\Vill-o'-thc-Wisp" were the Other plays.
Loan Kfscher. author and foreign eorrcsiHuulMit. will sp-ak on
"India—Key to Victory Over Japan" in Aycock Auditorium, Tues-day.
April 25, at X::MI p.m. During liis years as a foreign corre-spondent.
Kiseher WHS the house guest of Mohandas K. (ihamli. spiri-tual
and national lender of India.
Fischer has traveh-«l over most of
the world, harass visited the Middle
F.ust, F.uypt. Palestine. Irak, ami Spain.
Where he covered the S|Kiuish War. lie
was in Franco when World War II
hmke out. He has also traveled
throughout r.nulnml and Africa.
Nerves In Jewish lotion
Horn and educated in Philadelphia,
he volunteered In the summer of tOM
to serve ill the Jewish 1^'trnm recruited
to help re»apture the Holy 1-tud. He
lraine>l In t'anada and reached Pales-tine
alMiut the time of the Armistice;
he then stayed In the British army un-til
1020. The Wew York Pawl sent him
to Iterlln In 1021 ; and since then, be
has spent most of the pn*t H> years
on ntvinjj assifrnments In F.iiroiie.
In l'*"-1". for four months he worked
in the Tass office In Uindon ; In 1028
he substituted for Frederick Kuh in
the I'nlted Press bureau In Iterlln for
two months: In Nftf hMB, and I9M
he litl Miimmer parties throuich Husslii
for the <»|>cn Koad. Hi* laid s'one to
Itiissln In the summer of 1022 ns u
free-lance correspondent for the .Yen?
York Ending l*o*t, pa \ I lit' his own
way: after Iirj4 he'had pnis-rs as cor-n-
stHindent for The Xatio*.
Live* In Berlin, Manrow
Uvlnjc In Iterlln for u IIIIIUIMT of
yeurs, Fischer wrote a hook about Hit-ler
In 102.V He also lived In Moscow,
and he Is author of The Suvict in
Irvffd Affair*, which Is nUiut Russia
Amoue bis other Issiks are !/«•* and
I'alith-m; Itairn of Victory; nud /.at
pin; which was sold out the day be-fore
Its publication In iH-ccmU-r. IMS,
As the years |NiNsed nud his repulii
tlon icrew. I^uils Fischer built up his
private international syndicate, often
sclllm: the same articles to the Lon-don
\itr Still' MHinn. the I'urin, Enrouv
VaaaeJIe, Ihe Qanuut rHuave aft it
buhn*. and to dallies In Onto, St.N-k
holm. Praitue. and elsewhere
, . . lentils Fischer will lecture on "In-dia—
Key to Victory Over Japan" Tues-day.
April 2-".. at Him p.m. in Aycock
Auditorium. Mr. Fischer Is the author
of Empire.
Mrs. Lois RaHiburn Allison
Is Director of Production
To Be Held in Auditorium
The Woman's t'ollege Modern Dance
(trotip will present Its annual recital
Friday. April SB, at H p.m. In Aycock
AiKlItorliim. Mrs. Ix>ls lUtbbnrn Alli-son,
director of the Dance tSroup. will
be In Charge of the production.
The Daare Group will Interpret In
sonata music form Ihe colors char
treuse and purple. The sonata music
form. Mrs. Allison explains, becomes
vtaual through movement. The themes
of the sonata form are introduced
through movement In the eS|sisltlon
aeetlou; they are varied in the devel
opUM'iil section; and they return attain
for the recapitulation section.
Two froups of dumi-rs will translate
the quality Of the colors Into movement.
Mrs. Allison announces. The Hrxt theme
of the music Is the ajar, sharp, splashy
Chartreuse. The second theme Is the
rich. Biiwlfag purple. Mrs. Marcella
Heaal nu*i Martha GaJrpaajter win ac
enanpany on ihe piano. Miss Pauline
Wily comiH.seil mush- to tit the dnucc.
< omiral Nuinh- r
Rlllle XlfoaUC, president of the IHilici-
4*roiip. will dance a itiuileal coni|Hml
lion enflihsl "The Child PrmllKy."
The KTOUp will iliimr to the llrst
movement of ihe "(irosso for Piano ami
Sirluu tirchestra." com|sis<s| hy F.rnesi
Block.
Another rcroup selerttoa is "Vaipii."
by the Mexican Maapeaer t'arlos t'ha-iie/..
aeeompanled by the recorded or-chestra
of American and Mexican Mu-sicians
■panaared by the Museum of
Modern Art. This coui|Misltlnn Is n
primitive picture with simple slralKht
line destan which is religious in nature.
The Spanish Influence ionics In ns a
hteiHlln* of the primitive ami the S|«in
Nh In Mexico. -
Original Salo t ninposilinn
Anna ut 1 ne Ihiiilnp will da mi' an orig-inal
solo cnmjiofdtloii on the characters
who vlstl the art nailery. She will
portray Ihe woman who Is shocked at
the nudes, one who tries to understand
the abstract designs, and the e-umoU
seur. Mrs. Mant'lln Sei:al. eoaanoear
for the dance, will accom|umy at the
piano.
A croup of eicht K'TIS will dance to
a "Prelude" by Honnecer, a contein-porary
eaaapaaara
The tlnal sele«'tlou by the I in nee Croup
ineiulHTs will Is- a comic dance token
fnun a liilbl's story enlltbsl "The Prob-lem
Fox." Itarbara Sutlive, the nar-rator,
will Is-uln with: "l*ady Fox
of Falrtlebl. Connecticut, one day Rave
birth to a litter of seven little foxes.
For n while It api*>nred that they bad
all heeli created eipial." Bllt the> Were
not. l-lttle AiiEust, who bad no cbar-
(Continue4 on Page Two)
Students Are Appointed
To Head Judicial Board
Woody Hewitt Announces
Five Seniors, Two Juniors
To Be on Board Next Year
Woody Hewitt, next year's head of
the Student Co\ cm an-tit Association,
has announced her np|s>lntmeiits for
Judicial Hoard1. They are: seniors.
Anna QUlaante, Cam11 la ('rltlln. llotmie
MHioy. Helen Hisiver. and t'arol Van
Sickle; and Juniors, Juanlta Hat held
ami Winnie Yount.
Vicl Ih'Voe, as siNTetary of the Stu
dent tioverumeiit Assfsiutlou, will !■»■
■ecretary of the Jmllelal Hoard, and
Woody will preside.
Present ^niemliers of the hoard nre
Praaeea Bryant, Mary KIUK. Ima siee-loaT,
Mary MOIIIIK Klrkmaii. flalre Mi-
Kol»erts. Kvelyu Anderson, and Can*
I.MI liarward
The now appotatcaa win be Installed
at nana awrtlaaj May I.
Betty Nickerson Wins
Scholarship in English
Senior Greek Major Plans
To Heir in Work Next Fall
At Pennsylvania University
Hetty Nlekersmi, senior Cick uui-jor
ami mendsT of Phi Heta Kiippn.
haw Just IM-CII awarded a scholarship
for a >ear's study of Kntli-h at Ihe
I'lilverslty af Pennsylvania. She hi
Bam the alternate candidate for the
FrancIK K. Hcmictt scholarship lu Kua
llsh at this university. Hetty plans to
twain work toward her MA. In Knrilsh
next fall.
Miss Marilyn Harkclew, who nm-
Jored in (ireek also, now t«'U<'ber of
l-itiii at* Woman's ('olIeK**. had Ihe
HeuiH-tt scholar-hip year U-fore lust.

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Capl. Eddie Rickenbacker
Will Speak Here April 24
—See Paire Thro*' 77ie QAO€UUCUI
Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy"
Greensboro Symphony
6ives Concert Sunday
S. About ■"-> guests, ID the main
friends of the newly-elected members,
were Invited to hear the address and
to attend the reception.
MCIIIIMTS who were Initiated are
Ann Itainey, Rillie I'pcburcb. Alison
Hire. Jean Mooninu. Rarbara Roy,
Retty Nlckersron. Helen Sullivan,
Ixnilse f--i7-!i rn-. Anabel Kmbry. Mar-garet
Woosley, Mary Allee Vann, Chase
Johnson, llnrriet Sink, ('aniline «'abell,
and Hal Mareh. seniors, and Rachel
Ni-wliern, the Junior.
Suzanne Walker. Dorothy Levis.
Katheryne I-evls. and Janice Hooke
Moore, seniors, were selected for mem
Iiersbip In therr Junior year.
Miss Jane Snmuierell, of the de-part
incut of KiiKllsh, Is president of
this —ill— of Alphn t'hapter of Phi
Itelu Kiip|ia of the Slate of North
Carolina.
Harris Wofford Talks
To College Students
Wednesday Evening
Founder, First President
Of Student Federalist Union
Advocates Internationalism
Harris Wofford. dynamic lH-year-old
founder and first president of the
Student Federalist I'nloii. sjwike on
the ha-is and ideas of this onranir.a-ii<
n Wednesday night in the Alumnae
BOUUr.
Wofford said In Is'cinnini: bis talk
that the Federalist movement offers n
challenge to the elder statesmen of
Amerlea but mainly in ihe young
people. The idea of the World Fed-eral
1'nlon should, states Wofford, be
:i key issue in the presidential enm-f
«iijni. They mu.-t tackle the tremen-dous
problem of establishing a lasting
peBC¥ after the present world conflict.
This pOOCO will eome." he staled,
"only by the establishment of a deino
rratlc njateai of governini'iit that will
settle international dl-pules." The plan,
according to the Federalist I'niou
Ideals, h.s u II- main program the
formation of an Internal html federal
government organization which in
elmb-s a representative federal union
of democracies. These unions would
represent the poeptoa of nations, not
their governments. The fulfilment of
this plan Is proposed to lie brought
IIIMMII through education llrst and then
through organization.
In Introducing the s|»e:ikcr, Mary
Klleii l*nrd>\ representative of the Stu-dent
Federalists at Woman's College,
stated lhal Wofford bad Just returned
from a- two months' tour of the mid-west
where he had Itcen speaking—
altogether to about -Tp.Otio students—
in the Interest of this- idea ami organ
izlug new chapters. He has also ear-rfed
tin a tour through New Kngland.
Si nee he arrived in this area he baa
sjsiken at Cull ford < '.'liege, Senior
High school, and In talking Wednes-day
night here very probably made
bis last speech before being Inducted
into the Army Air Corps.
Speaker
. . . Hiden Ramsey, editor of the Ashe-ville
PiNcea>Tfntea, will address the
Woman's College ehfipier of I'hi Beta
Kappa at the initiation <>f new ajettV
Is-rs tonight, April 21, at 7 :30 pin
Sale of Stamps Sinks
Too Low to Mention
Amount of war stamps sold this
week was too low to merit print-ing
a list of totals, Dorothy and
Katheryne Lev Is, co-chairmen, have
announced.
Student Legislature
Meets Wednesday
To Discuss Amendment
Two Members Present Idea
For Chang* in Constitution
Concerning Referendum
I»oris Smith and Barbara Bramble
I resented for the consideration of leg
Islature, Wednesday, April W, an
amendment to the SCA constitution
which corn-ems initiative and refer
endliui. If |Nlsscd. Ihls amendment will
!«■ the ninth since the ratllleatlou of
the constitution.
The amendment has beau through
the legal pns-edures for an amendment
to the coiistlliitl said Jean IMefcey,
ehaianan of legislature. It must In
dlspla\.-d on all ball hulletln »-•■ r-l-f
»r the following Iwn weeks, whieh
are Immediately previous fo (In- RMSS
Ilieetiug when the student DOdj will
vote on the qneoUoat,
"We want the lultialive nid refer
eiidum issue considered from all It-sides,
and diseiissed thoroughly in the
dormitory. It has its disadvantage'*
as well as its advantages." said Doris
Smith Among the points for Initia
live and referendum. Dorhl explained
lhal the amendment would "serve as
an Insurance policy for the students.'
In ea^s where laws are passed which
face streng opposition.
Moreover, she stated, legislature win
Is- "freer" In the laws It paaaM and
Its motn tiers can urge on those who
disapprove of legislature's action that
they "do something aliout it them
selves." Ihiris emphasised that the
group who originated the amendment
have done so without any sjtecilic re
forms In mind, but in the light of a
more democratic government.
■"There Is a poaelhflllty that ■ radical
minority may take advantage of this
new procedure. However. I have
ci KB faith in the Judgments ,.f i j..
-indents of (his college in general lo
IH-Iiove that they will consider such
pro|s>sals carefully." said Doras, out-lining
further the arguments cuaeem-lug
initiative and referendum
Twenty par cent was suggested by
Marie Itelk as a more suitable proper.
tion than ten |s-r cent of Ihe student
IMMIV necessary for signing the |S'tl-lion
tu Kct the Initiative and refer-endum
machinery in motion. Doris
noted that eight to ten per cent is
the customary figure In stale consti-tutions
which provide for Intuitive and
referendum, but was answered by the
fact that the students of the college
are In an areu more concentrated than
the population of a state. Hal March
stated that "anything hacked by ten
per cent of the students Is worthy of
consideration.**
IMckey introduced several sugges-tions
which had l"'ii made to ber
which could be lined up under the
(Continued on Page Two)
Dr. Winfield Rogers
Gives English Lecture
On Matthew Arnold
Department Head Explains
Poet As 'Humanist Acting
As Critic of Life'
Shaking Thursday noon. April 13*.
in Ayenefc Auditorium. Dr. Winlield
Hanaro, the third lecturer in the de
part nasal of Kugiish scries, stated that
Matthew Arnold was "the humanist
acting as a critic of life."
Hi- address. entitled "Matthew \r
uoid After Rereading 'Dover Reach*."
atreaued Ihe analysts of lhal aoera. "It
express** much of Arnold's basic, orig
inn) opinion or altitude." Dr. Kogers
said. "The lines .implv that at mo
■Bents in the hi-tory of man. all has
been serene; man at such Momcnls
has been earelopeil b> coniforllna
faith, at such moments man has fell
i irluin . . . The emphasis of the poeJU
is that, taken by and large, there is
an eternal note of sadness, heard now
hy Arnold and his contemporaries;
heard long ago by Sophocles."
In the line. "Ah. love, let ns Is-true
to one another!" I >r. Kogers staled
that "we may find the original of his
credo . . . Starting with this poem, I
wish io bring you etoaer to a great
man's sense ot the three great ■.►attorns
of relationships thai concern the mas-ter
spirits. These relationships, us
ItolMTt Halrhino phrases them, are;
llrsi. man's relation to mini, -r. Rogers said that Arnold's belief
was thai "(MS'try is u criticism of life
|M>werfully rendered by the largely
e«piip|M-d man." and returned to the
original credo to state that the cry
"Is ill oner a cry of dcs|Hiir and a
cry of faith, tin- powerful criticism,
a poetic criticism, even If Incomplete,
an adequate poetic criticism In-cause It
hiis the appropriate, inseparable man
ner."
I li-cussing Arnold and humanism.
Dr. Roger* ■ i.-iim • I hnaaanlsau ns "the
doctrine of human effort, of human
planning, of human iiiau.x shlrdnesH,
of human culture, as nfipuned to sue
ciaUy.aiion. rocaUouallsan, sectarian-ism.
narrownes-. prejudice.** lie said
Louis Fischer Will Give Lecture
Tuesday in Aycock Auditorium
Well Known Author, Foreign Correspondent
Speaks on 'India-Key to Victory Over Japan'
Dr. Dwight Chalmers
Will Deliver Sermon
Minister Plans to Conduct
Various Discussion Groups;
Freshmen Will He Sponsors
"The Knarnee of Itcllcloti" Is the
tentative subject of the last ('Diversity
Sermon of the year to IN- delivered by
l>r. Dwight If. Chalmers, pastor of the
Trinity Avenue Presbyterian * "hurch
in inirliam, Sunday Morning, April
"i>. II a in. In Arrack Auditorium. The
sermon will IK- K|NHUMired by Ihe fresh-man
rlasH.
Sin.-,. |»r K Sianl.v .1 v world
fa - Christian leader and author,
will -jN-ak lIUrlUR the cha|.e| program
the rmllouing Tuesday, there will U
no further opportunity tor the fen-eral
public to hear I *r. Chalmers.
lie win speak in junior primary edu-cation
majors Monday, May I. at HI
a.m. and to senior majors In the
same department at - pin Following
this. Dr. Chal ra will apeak to the
one year commercial class In lllnshaw
hall from 4-."» p.m. on "The Practical
Vain*' of Religion,** and will lead an
Informal dlneusalOB In Hailey hall
Momlay night.
Foreign Correspondent . ..
Modern Dancers To Give
Annual Recital Friday Night
thai "Arnold was
>ei he believed it
man. He VMS a de
in |iiali)y ; in w, he says. In etTect,
we an- woikiiig from limited deHMM'
racy towards universal democracy :
now. be aayn, in effect, we are work-ing
from limited civHlaathM to mil
versiil ei\ll|y.alloii." sm| In Kogers.
"ArnohTs is-iief in the Inatlnctlre n|.
ward thrust of man is fundamental"
Dr. lingers concluded. "I- it more
or less than ll ry. "Ah, leie. lei US
IN- inn* to one another.' |esl the world
continue io have neither J«y. wor love,
imr light, nor eertltude, nor peace, anf
help tot- pain'.' Man line |« man. man
true to man's self, true to thai noblest
Instinct, the Instinct for expansion. We
inu-1 wilh Arnold nurse 'the uncoil-
•pierahle hope*."
Seniors Will Be Issued
Caps, GownsA pril 26-27
Seniors may %H thrlr raps and
Kowns on April 26 and 'XI from
9 a.m. lo VI noon and from 2 p.m.
to \ pjn. in the Dlkrnn Hall. A
fee of ten rents will be charged.
Tin- seniors, attired In raps and
Eowns. will inert In front of Ihr
uiidltoriiun at StSi May I lo murrb
In for the last mass meetinr,.
W. C. Jackson lo Talk
At Senior Class Meeting
Dean to Speak to Students
On Woman's College Policies
At (.;i( hcriiu; Thursday Night
I»r. w t*. Jackson will !*• Kueat
speaker nl Ihe senior clans meet lug at
7 p.m.. Thursday, April 27. in Htudeaaa'
RulldlUfl He will talk to ihe seniors
ahoiil pnlleles of Woman's Cotleffe.
Itlllie rpcfaurcfa, class presidelll.
pdressen the lutpurtaweof this meeting
and ureea all senhirn lo attend. The
rlnss sift wil Is- roted on at that time,
and several aniioiiiici'inents couceriiliiu
commeiiceineul will he made.
Jean Stepheiioon and I telly Nicker
son were elected dance chairman for
(lie commencement hall and commence
men) s|M-aker. respectively, in Ihe liual
eleitions April 17.
The Sisters Mclntosh . .
. . . Flora liclle Ihi/clniaii. EJQIM, ami Phyllis Sullivan, Tizzie. were
the comedy elinrarters in one of the three one-act plays presented
Saturday. April 1"). in Ayeoek Auditorium. "Twelve I'ouud l^Mik"
and *'\Vill-o'-thc-Wisp" were the Other plays.
Loan Kfscher. author and foreign eorrcsiHuulMit. will sp-ak on
"India—Key to Victory Over Japan" in Aycock Auditorium, Tues-day.
April 25, at X::MI p.m. During liis years as a foreign corre-spondent.
Kiseher WHS the house guest of Mohandas K. (ihamli. spiri-tual
and national lender of India.
Fischer has traveh-«l over most of
the world, harass visited the Middle
F.ust, F.uypt. Palestine. Irak, ami Spain.
Where he covered the S|Kiuish War. lie
was in Franco when World War II
hmke out. He has also traveled
throughout r.nulnml and Africa.
Nerves In Jewish lotion
Horn and educated in Philadelphia,
he volunteered In the summer of tOM
to serve ill the Jewish 1^'trnm recruited
to help re»apture the Holy 1-tud. He
lraine>l In t'anada and reached Pales-tine
alMiut the time of the Armistice;
he then stayed In the British army un-til
1020. The Wew York Pawl sent him
to Iterlln In 1021 ; and since then, be
has spent most of the pn*t H> years
on ntvinjj assifrnments In F.iiroiie.
In l'*"-1". for four months he worked
in the Tass office In Uindon ; In 1028
he substituted for Frederick Kuh in
the I'nlted Press bureau In Iterlln for
two months: In Nftf hMB, and I9M
he litl Miimmer parties throuich Husslii
for the cn Koad. Hi* laid s'one to
Itiissln In the summer of 1022 ns u
free-lance correspondent for the .Yen?
York Ending l*o*t, pa \ I lit' his own
way: after Iirj4 he'had pnis-rs as cor-n-
stHindent for The Xatio*.
Live* In Berlin, Manrow
Uvlnjc In Iterlln for u IIIIIUIMT of
yeurs, Fischer wrote a hook about Hit-ler
In 102.V He also lived In Moscow,
and he Is author of The Suvict in
Irvffd Affair*, which Is nUiut Russia
Amoue bis other Issiks are !/«•* and
I'alith-m; Itairn of Victory; nud /.at
pin; which was sold out the day be-fore
Its publication In iH-ccmU-r. IMS,
As the years |NiNsed nud his repulii
tlon icrew. I^uils Fischer built up his
private international syndicate, often
sclllm: the same articles to the Lon-don
\itr Still' MHinn. the I'urin, Enrouv
VaaaeJIe, Ihe Qanuut rHuave aft it
buhn*. and to dallies In Onto, St.N-k
holm. Praitue. and elsewhere
, . . lentils Fischer will lecture on "In-dia—
Key to Victory Over Japan" Tues-day.
April 2-".. at Him p.m. in Aycock
Auditorium. Mr. Fischer Is the author
of Empire.
Mrs. Lois RaHiburn Allison
Is Director of Production
To Be Held in Auditorium
The Woman's t'ollege Modern Dance
(trotip will present Its annual recital
Friday. April SB, at H p.m. In Aycock
AiKlItorliim. Mrs. Ix>ls lUtbbnrn Alli-son,
director of the Dance tSroup. will
be In Charge of the production.
The Daare Group will Interpret In
sonata music form Ihe colors char
treuse and purple. The sonata music
form. Mrs. Allison explains, becomes
vtaual through movement. The themes
of the sonata form are introduced
through movement In the eS|sisltlon
aeetlou; they are varied in the devel
opUM'iil section; and they return attain
for the recapitulation section.
Two froups of dumi-rs will translate
the quality Of the colors Into movement.
Mrs. Allison announces. The Hrxt theme
of the music Is the ajar, sharp, splashy
Chartreuse. The second theme Is the
rich. Biiwlfag purple. Mrs. Marcella
Heaal nu*i Martha GaJrpaajter win ac
enanpany on ihe piano. Miss Pauline
Wily comiH.seil mush- to tit the dnucc.
< omiral Nuinh- r
Rlllle XlfoaUC, president of the IHilici-
4*roiip. will dance a itiuileal coni|Hml
lion enflihsl "The Child PrmllKy."
The KTOUp will iliimr to the llrst
movement of ihe "(irosso for Piano ami
Sirluu tirchestra." com|sisnred that they bad
all heeli created eipial." Bllt the> Were
not. l-lttle AiiEust, who bad no cbar-
(Continue4 on Page Two)
Students Are Appointed
To Head Judicial Board
Woody Hewitt Announces
Five Seniors, Two Juniors
To Be on Board Next Year
Woody Hewitt, next year's head of
the Student Co\ cm an-tit Association,
has announced her np|s>lntmeiits for
Judicial Hoard1. They are: seniors.
Anna QUlaante, Cam11 la ('rltlln. llotmie
MHioy. Helen Hisiver. and t'arol Van
Sickle; and Juniors, Juanlta Hat held
ami Winnie Yount.
Vicl Ih'Voe, as siNTetary of the Stu
dent tioverumeiit Assfsiutlou, will !■»■
■ecretary of the Jmllelal Hoard, and
Woody will preside.
Present ^niemliers of the hoard nre
Praaeea Bryant, Mary KIUK. Ima siee-loaT,
Mary MOIIIIK Klrkmaii. flalre Mi-
Kol»erts. Kvelyu Anderson, and Can*
I.MI liarward
The now appotatcaa win be Installed
at nana awrtlaaj May I.
Betty Nickerson Wins
Scholarship in English
Senior Greek Major Plans
To Heir in Work Next Fall
At Pennsylvania University
Hetty Nlekersmi, senior Cick uui-jor
ami mendsT of Phi Heta Kiippn.
haw Just IM-CII awarded a scholarship
for a >ear's study of Kntli-h at Ihe
I'lilverslty af Pennsylvania. She hi
Bam the alternate candidate for the
FrancIK K. Hcmictt scholarship lu Kua
llsh at this university. Hetty plans to
twain work toward her MA. In Knrilsh
next fall.
Miss Marilyn Harkclew, who nm-
Jored in (ireek also, now t«'U